A wildly popular Egyptian satirical news show, presented by television host Bassem Youssef, has this week embroiled high-profile media personalities in the country to trade fierce retorts, and warnings of legal action against the host.

Youssef, a doctor-cum-comedian who presents his parody show on the privately-owned “CBC” Egyptian satellite channel, launched a satirical attack on presenters who host news talk shows on the same channel.

He described a show hosted by Emad Eldeen Adeeb, who was one of the few media personalities in the country to interview toppled former President Hosni Mubarak, as a snooze-fest, while displaying a picture of a fabricated Facebook page.

The page’s title read “We are all Emad Eldin Adeeb,” in reference to the popular Egyptian Facebook page “We are all Khaled Said,” an Egyptian who was tortured to death by police officers, sparking mass protests for his cause.

In the past, Youssef has become known among Egyptians for poking fun at presidential and media-related problems in the country.

In one sketch of the episode, Youssef also lampooned the TV channel, saying it aligned to remnants of the Mubarak regime.

But when a cash machine graphic pops up on the screen next Youssef, an intentional tongue-in-cheek reminder to the host that the channel is paying his wage, he changes course and praises CBC for “inciting the revolution,” joking that the channel is revolutionary after all.

“If Dr. Yousef wants to satirically mock other people’s actions and words, then he must know this is a channel with aims towards democracy, which is why no one should take things personally,” Adeeb said on his talk show which followed Youssef’s.

“But there is a red line, for those who understand the real difference between political satire and what can be legally be seen as an insult and defamation,” Adeeb added.

“Egyptians have a long history as the region's funny men. In many other Arab countries, Egyptians are known as "ibn nukta", or "the son of jokes". The sheer number of jokes from Egypt reveals the importance of humor in daily life,” wrote journalist Megan Detrie earlier this month, in an article about surging “political comedy” in the country.

But has Youssef taken it too far?

The satirist also portrayed news TV host Khairy Ramadan as a media “charity case,” as described by Egyptian media, pointing (what he portrayed to be) “too nice,” naïve, simple-minded comments made by the presenter about the country being in a bad state.

On Sunday Youssef posted on his Twitter account: “BRING IT ON!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!” prompting over 600 retweets and responses from Twitter users related to Adeeb’s threat to pursue legal action against the satirist.